This command deletes the job schedule that has the ID MyJobSchedule.
The command prompts you for confirmation before it deletes the job.
Use the Get-AzBatchAccountKey cmdlet to assign a context to the $Context variable.
Example 2: Delete a Batch job without confirmation by using the pipeline
This command gets the job schedule that has the ID MyJobSchedule by using the Get-AzBatchJobSchedule cmdlet.
The command passes that job schedule to the current cmdlet by using the pipeline operator.
The command deletes that job schedule.
Because the command includes the Force parameter, it does not prompt you for confirmation.
Parameters
-BatchContext
Specifies the BatchAccountContext instance that this cmdlet uses to interact with the Batch service.
If you use the Get-AzBatchAccount cmdlet to get your BatchAccountContext, then Microsoft Entra authentication will be used when interacting with the Batch service. To use shared key authentication instead, use the Get-AzBatchAccountKey cmdlet to get a BatchAccountContext object with its access keys populated. When using shared key authentication, the primary access key is used by default. To change the key to use, set the BatchAccountContext.KeyInUse property.
This cmdlet supports the common parameters: -Debug, -ErrorAction, -ErrorVariable,
-InformationAction, -InformationVariable, -OutBuffer, -OutVariable, -PipelineVariable,
-ProgressAction, -Verbose, -WarningAction, and -WarningVariable. For more information, see
about_CommonParameters.